Leadership lessons from the Royal Navy
This branch of the British armed services consciously fosters cheerfulness and nourishes its collective memory. Business executives should take note.
Britain’s Royal Navy is a disciplined command-and-control
organization that moves across 140 million square miles of the world’s oceans.
Although few environments are tougher than a ship or submarine, I’ve been
struck, while conducting research on the Royal Navy, by the extent to which
these engines of war run on “soft” leadership skills. For officers leading
small teams in constrained quarters, there’s no substitute for cheerfulness and
effective storytelling. In fact, I’d go so far as to say that naval training is
predicated on the notion that when two groups with equal resources attempt the
same thing, the successful group will be the one whose leaders better
understand how to use the softer skills to maintain effort and motivate.
I believe
that the same principle holds true for business. In this article, I hope to
translate for business leaders—like the ones I’ve gotten to know throughout my
career as a business-school professor and communications adviser—some of what I
learned while writing the Royal Navy’s first new leadership handbook since
1963. That handbook,1 published last year, is based on
research of unprecedented length and breadth, as well as my own direct
observation of officer training and life at sea.
Among the many softer leadership skills
important to the Royal Navy, I highlight here the aforementioned cheerfulness
and storytelling, which to me were both unexpected and broadly applicable.
While the means of applying these lessons will, of course, differ by organization
and individual, reflecting on them should stimulate fresh thinking by senior
executives about the relationship between soft management skills and superior
performance.
Cheerfulness
counts
No one
follows a pessimist, and cheerfulness is a choice. It has long been understood
to influence happiness at work and therefore productivity.2 The cheerful leader in any environment
broadcasts confidence and capability, and the Royal Navy instinctively
understands this. It is the captain, invariably, who sets the mood of a vessel;
a gloomy captain means a gloomy ship. And mood travels fast. Most ships’ crews
are either smaller than, or divided into, units of fewer than 150 members—near
the upper end of Dunbar’s Number, suggested by British anthropologist Robin
Dunbar as the extent of a fully functioning social group.3
The Royal
Navy assiduously records how cheerfulness counts in operations. For example, in
2002 one of its ships ran aground, triggering the largest and most dangerous
flooding incident in recent years. The Royal Navy’s investigating board of
inquiry found that “morale remained high” throughout demanding hours of damage
control and that “teams were cheerful and enthusiastic,” focusing on their
tasks; “sailors commented that the presence, leadership, and good humor of
senior officers gave reassurance and confidence that the ship would survive.”4 Turning up and being cheerful, in
other words, had a practical benefit.
How do you teach cheerfulness? The Royal Navy
takes every informal opportunity to demonstrate its usefulness. To fill the
dead time that invariably occurs during training exercises and other routine
activities, for example, navy personnel routinely hold informal games or
contests. These games, known as Dogwatch Sports (after the dogwatch periods of
duty in the evening, when the entire ship’s company is typically awake), are
often trivial and nonsensical—passing a stick, for example, across an
ever-widening divide. But besides cheerfulness, they encourage speed of
thought, an outward-looking mind-set, and a willingness to talk. Cheerfulness
in turn affects how people sit, stand, and gesticulate: you can see its absence
when heads are buried in hands and eye contact is missing.
Royal Marine commanders understand
particularly well that cheerfulness is fueled by humor: one I met required his
whole company to “sing for their supper” by telling a joke—any joke—in front of
their fellow marines prior to eating. That’s part of a wider navy culture that
expects everyone, from the top down to the newest and rawest sailor, to be able
and willing to stand up and talk, in an impromptu fashion, about what they’re
doing. Such a skill is especially prized in an organization that moves people
quickly and often (typically, every two years) and requires them, perhaps as a
matter of life and death, to hit the ground running in their new posts.
The practice of “banter”—a peculiarly British
form of playful, if gently mocking, communication—is also openly encouraged as
an upbeat and informal way to regulate relationships and break down hierarchy.
Banter occurs at all ranks and quite often between them. A Royal Navy driver
will talk more readily to a second sea lord than the average corporate employee
will engage his or her CEO in an elevator. Indeed, one CEO I know described the
social awkwardness of riding one with his (clearly discomfited) colleagues by
confiding: “Everyone acts as if they’re dating my eldest daughter!”
Several times, I personally experienced the
social cohesion that banter helps promote, most memorably on mountaintop
exercises with the Royal Marines. News of my snoring had preceded me at
nightfall, but embarrassment quickly gave way to a feeling of social inclusion
in a group of people I had never previously met. Banter is always tempered by
respect for others.
Conversely, empty optimism or false cheer can
hurt morale. As one naval captain puts it, “Being able to make the uncertain
certain is the secret to leadership. You have to understand, though, that if
you are always über-optimistic, then the effect of your optimism, over time, is
reduced.”
The relevance of many of these techniques to
the corporate workplace is obvious, not least in a world of rapid job rotation,
team-based work, and short-term projects that are typically set up in response
to sudden competitive challenges and require an equally fleet-footed response.
Keep
spinning ‘dits’
The Royal
Navy has a highly efficient informal internal
network. Leadership information and stories known as dits are exchanged across
it—between tiers of management, generations, practices (branches), and social
groups. With the help of dits, the Royal Navy’s collective consciousness
assimilates new knowledge and insights while reinforcing established ones.
Visitors to naval establishments or ships are often invited for a few dits;
crews are encouraged to share theirs.
These dits
are one way the Royal Navy fosters what a business would call its culture, or
philosophy. Writing in 1966, long-time McKinsey managing director Marvin Bower
observed, “The literature on company philosophy is neither very extensive nor
very satisfactory.”5 I fear that the same is true today and
that many commercial organizations would benefit from thinking more
deliberately about how to foster what in effect is their collective memory. A
bust of a long-dead founder in a company’s entrance hall is no substitute for
the way the Royal Navy meticulously charts its informal experiences of
leadership and broadcasts them throughout leadership training. The experience
of a special-forces commander in tackling Somali pirates—and his emphasis on
the 40 separate scenarios his team contemplated ahead of the
engagement—underlined to everyone listening the Royal Navy’s meticulous
attention to detailed and exhaustive planning.
The Royal
Navy allocates time and space for these exchanges: two examples are Stand Easy
(a midmorning tea break) and ship’s company Adventurous Training (an off-site
expedition in which a ship’s department—a group that could include anywhere
from 12 to 100 people—participates in team and individual activities such as
mountaineering, exploring caves, and kayaking). And the long-standing messes
where personnel can meet and talk to colleagues have only recently been
mirrored by corporations in the setting up of attractive communal spaces,
dubbed village greens in one organization I know. The value of informal dits is
also supported by the Royal Navy’s collective formal memory,
or long-wave culture. At every naval establishment, two books are on display in
the entrance, both open at the day’s date. One is a book of remembrance for
those killed in action on that day; the other details past naval activities on
that date. Both draw on the Royal Navy’s 400-year history.
There’s a
fine line, of course, between respecting timeless values that can sustain an
organization when times get tough and becoming a prisoner of the past or
desensitized to changes in the forces at work on that organization. The power
of the Royal Navy approach is to focus on what individuals actually did in situations big and small, thereby
providing inspiration for new challenges while acknowledging that the nature of
those challenges and leaders’ responses to them are an ever-changing,
never-ending story.
In my experience, many organizations that lack
a strong collective memory wind up ignoring their own wisdom in uncertain times.
They’re also more likely to follow the latest nostrum on leadership without
digging into their past, thereby deskilling themselves. One antidote is making
time for storytelling: low-tech oral history or cutting-edge social-media
platforms that give today’s leaders new opportunities to spin dits on a regular
basis. Finally, although periodic, the process of commissioning and overseeing
a corporate history can be of great benefit to the ethos of an organization—an
invaluable opportunity for inviting staff members to consider what it has done,
what it stands for, and how it does business.
Navy life has created a style of leadership
that fosters trust, respect, and collective effort. Softer skills such as
cheerfulness, storytelling, and the creation of a collective memory—all of
which make indispensable contributions to the effectiveness of ships and
fleets—merit serious reflection by business leaders, too.
About the author
Andrew St. George is a
senior fellow at Aberystwyth University’s School of Management and Business, in
the United Kingdom. He is a corporate adviser and author of numerous
publications on business and communications, including Royal Navy
Way of Leadership (Cornerstone
Publishing, June 2012).
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